
Yes, when anyone proposes building our tools on top of these services I ask “what will happen to this when they start charging what it really costs to run these models?”

Yes, when anyone proposes building our tools on top of these services I ask “what will happen to this when they start charging what it really costs to run these models?”

Oh the fancy ones are separate bits of paper. Mostly they print a qc check with a tick right onto the packaging

There’s a few boards that bridge the gap between pi and a pc for media servers and small NAS uses. Look at Asus Tinker board, Odroid, Udoo Bolt, Orange Pi, Rockpro64, BeagleBone

I donate to the open source hosting that’s hosting this lemmy instance fediservices.nz seems like a good model for now

Yeah the celeron and pentium models are amazing low power machines to run Home Assistant on. Mine is running half a dozen other docker addons including frigate to do ai object detection (offloading most of the heavy lifting to a Google coral chip plugged into usb)
Being the default industry standard meant drivers were never a hassle
Paying once for a mobile app doesn’t make much sense for devs, on the desktop they’ll come out with a new version a year or two later that’s an upgrade or full price for the update. On mobile they can’t loose their install base so are stuck supporting customers forever who aren’t bringing in any more revenue. Most app developers make far more per user from ads on the free versions of the app. As much as I hate ads and subscription fees, I feel for the small app developer.

Can you tell me more about Rampart?
Sony pictures just closed Pixelmondo after running it further into the ground